F.A.Z. HANNOVER. The chairman of the Central Council of Jews in Germany on
Friday warned the nation's political parties against allowing immigration
to become a campaign issue in the Sept. 22 general election.

Speaking at a ceremony marking Holocaust Day, Paul Spiegel said this would
be an ominous development and could unleash sentiments that nobody wants to
hear. "It shouldn't happen that migrants seeking and finding a new home in
Germany end up feeling like second-class citizens because the majority does
not accept them," he said.

Mr. Spiegel also called on Germany to devote as much attention to combating
its burgeoning neo-Nazi scene as it is to helping in the war on terrorism.
"Neo-Nazis and right-wing extremists are not only a danger for minorities
in this country," he said. "They are also a threat to democracy -- no less
than terrorism is."

Germany introduced Holocaust Day in 1996 to help prevent future generations
from forgetting Nazi policies of genocide. The official date is Jan. 27,
the date in 1945 when the Red Army liberated the death camp Auschwitz,
where as estimated 1.5 million people, most of them Jews, died.

"Germany`s conscience" at it`s best! There doesn´t paSS a week when you don`t hear this guy whining about the evil,evil Germans(If you speak German I might show you some nice interviews). Lol, but the funny thing is: :finger :Nobody cares!!! Even the politically correct politicians don´t care about him anymore since they are abviously piSSed off by him! Too bad the SS didn´t get him, when he was hiding in some dirty cellar!!!!!!!!!!!!!